How to Look at Pop-Art is a robotic video recorded in realtime by a
miniature camera mounted on the cartridge of an ink-jet printer. The video
shows the computer printing process of Roy Lichtenstein's screen print
The Melody Haunts my Reverie - from the perspective of the rhythmically
moving printing head.

The audio-visual and temporal structure of the video
emerges in the printing process. How to Look at Pop-Art presents the
audience with new ways of looking at Lichtenstein's well-known image. At
the same time it references the mechanic production techniques of pop-art
works on many levels.

Development
"How to Look at Pop-Art" is a linear video of 2:29 minutes length. It was
the initial inspiration for the work database, which
I realized in collaboration with Adriana de Souza e Silva in 2002.